| Literature DB >> 35028012 |
Elham Khosrowabadi1, Tomasz Wenta1, Salla Keskitalo2, Aki Manninen1, Sakari Kellokumpu1.
Abstract
Several distinct metastasis-associated glycosylation changes have been shown to promote cancer cell invasion and metastasis, the main cause of death of cancer patients. However, it is unclear whether their presence reflects cell- or tissue-specific variations for metastasis, or species needed to drive different phases of the metastatic cascade. To address this issue from a different perspective, we investigated here whether different cancer cell lines share any glycotopes that are common and important for their invasive phenotype. By using lectin microarray glycan profiling and an established myoma tissue-based 3D invasion assay, we identified a single glycotope recognized by Helix Pomatia agglutinin (HPA), whose expression level in different cancer cells correlated significantly with their invasive potential. Lectin pull-down assay and LC-MS/MS analysis in highly- (A431 and SW-48) and poorly invasive (HepG2 and RCC4) cancer cells revealed ~85 glycoproteins of which several metastasis-promoting members of the integrin family of cell adhesion receptors, the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) and the matrix metalloproteinase-14 (MMP-14) were among the abundant ones. Moreover, we showed that the level of the GalNAc glycotope in MMP-14, EGFR, αV-, β1- and β4 integrin in highly and poorly invasive cancer cells correlated positively with their invasive potential. Collectively, our findings suggest that altered glycosylation of several metastasis-associated glycoproteins with terminal GalNAc drives the highly invasive cancer cell phenotype. Copyright:Entities:
Keywords: Helix Pomatia agglutinin (HPA); cancer; glycocode; glycosylation; invasion; terminal GalNAc
Mesh:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35028012 PMCID: PMC8751650 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.28167
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
Cellular characteristics of the different cancer cell lines
| Cell Type | Gender | Age | Tissue of origin | Cancer type | Cell type | Karyotype (Chr. Number) |
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| SW-48 | Female | 82 years | colon | adenocarcinoma | epithelial | Diploid 47 (+7) |
| DLD-1 | Male | adult | colon | adenocarcinoma | epithelial | Pseudodiploid (46) |
| CaCo-2 | Male | 72 years | colon | adenocarcinoma | epithelial | Tetraploid (96) |
| HT-29 | Female | 44 years | colon | adenocarcinoma | epithelial | 71 |
| A431 | Female | 86 years | skin | carcinoma | epithelial | Triploid (74) |
| HepG2 | Male | 15 years | liver | carcinoma | epithelial | 55 |
| RCC4 | ? | ? | kidney | carcinoma | epithelial | ? (VHL−/−) |
| MCF-7 | Female | 69 years | breast (metastasis) | adenocarcinoma | epithelial | 82 |
| MDA-MB231 | Female | 51 years | breast (metastasis) | adenocarcinoma | epithelial | 64 |
Figure 1Invasion potential of different cancer cell lines.
(A) Myoma-tissue-based 3D invasion assay. Cells were seeded on top of myoma discs, allowed to grow for 21 days before fixing and processing for histochemical staining. Sections were cut perpendicularly to the seeded cell layer, stained, and imaged before quantification. Representative figures of the invasive foci inside the myoma tissue are shown (arrowheads). (B) Total invasion area (μm2) of the foci in each cell line. (C) The median invasion depth of the foci from the seeded cell layer. Twelve sections from each myoma disc (n = 2/24) were used for the quantification with ImageJ software. The whiskers indicate 10th to 90th percentiles. (D) A bar graph showing the relative invasive potential of each cancer cell type. The values were calculated by scaling the medians of the total area and the median depth using scores from 5 (high) to 0 (low). Invasive potential was calculated as the mean of the two scores.
Figure 2Comparison of glycosylation profiles between different cancer cell types.
(A) Heat map representation of the lectin microarray glycan profiles. The rows represent normalized median intensity values of each lectin. Three independent samples were used for determination of the intensity values in each cell line. The color scale from blue to red indicates low to high signal intensities. Non-malignant COS-7 cells were used as a reference cell line for ranking. (B) Comparison of the glycan profiles by using principal component analysis tool in Excel. Normalized intensity values for each lectin were used for the analysis. The number of components is determined automatically from the input values. (C) Hierarchical clustering analysis of the glycosylation differences or similarities between different cancers cell type. Normalized median intensity values of each lectin, the SPSS software with Ward linkage analysis and Euclidean correlation coefficient as the distance metric were used for the analysis. (D) Comparison of the glycosylation profiles between subcluster forming cell lines. In each plot, normalized median intensity values were plotted against each other. The lines represent linear correlation equations. The R2 values are shown for each plot.
Figure 3Identification of lectins that are specific for each clustered cell pair.
Lectins that define clustered cell pairs were identified by using conditional formatting algorithms embedded in Excel. In brief, similar lectin binding intensities were searched for each clustered cell by setting an acceptable intensity limit to 1.5 × SD. Any values within these limits were designated as similar whereas the ones exceeding these limits were designated as dissimilar. Specific lectins for each cell pair were then selected based on its similarity between the cell pair and dissimilarity in the other cell lines. Normalized median intensity values (±SD) were used for comparisons. (A) Selected lectins and their sugar specificities specific for each clustered cell pair. (B) Histogram showing lectin binding intensities specific for the clustered MCF-7/MDA-MB231 cell pair (marked by red box). (C) Histogram showing lectin binding intensities specific for the clustered DLD-1/CaCo-2 cell pair. (D) Histogram showing lectin binding intensities specific for the clustered RCC4, HepG2 and HT-29 cell lines.
Figure 4Correlation and impact of HPA binding to cancer cell invasive potential.
(A) Correlation analysis between lectin binding and invasive potential of different cancer cell types. Normalize median intensity values for each lectin and relative invasive potential (Figure 1D) were used for the analysis with Excel’s data analysis tool pack. Pearson R values are shown and ranked from high to low and marked with red (high) and blue (low) colors. (B) Correlation analyses of selected lectins with their normalized median intensity values in relation to invasive potential of different cancer cell types. Pearson R values and statistical significance of the correlation are shown at the bottom of the table. Regression analysis with ANOVA was used for testing the statistical significance. (C) Multiple linear regression analysis showing the contribution of each lectin to cancer cell invasive potential. Each bar represents the contribution (as percentages) of the lectins used for the analysis (bottom). (D and E) Comparison of the cancer cell invasive potential (D) with the level of HPA binding glycotopes (E) in different cancer cell lines. Correlation and regression analyses showed a significant correlation between these two variables (R-value of 0.76 and p-value of 0.007**).
Figure 5Identification of HPA binding glycoproteins and their comparison between highly and poorly invasive cancer cell types.
(A) HPA-binding proteins in highly (A431 and SW-48) and poorly (RCC4 and HepG2) invasive cancer cell samples as revealed by lectin blotting with biotinylated HPA. Complexes were visualized using HRP-conjugated streptavidin. A representative blot is shown. (B) Immunoblotting of selected HPA-binding glycoproteins after lectin pull-down with relevant antibodies in highly (A431, SW-48) and poorly (RCC4 and HepG2) invasive cancer cells. The star (*) in laminin β3 blot denotes a non-specific band. A representative blot is shown. (C) Immunoblotting of the HPA binding glycoproteins in input samples of the same cell types. A representative blot is shown. (D) Quantification of HPA pull-down protein levels in the immunoblot (B). ImageJ software was used for quantification of the band intensities as arbitrary units (AU). (E) Quantification of protein input levels in the immunoblot (C). ImageJ software was used for quantification of the band intensities as arbitrary units (AU). (F) Correlation analysis between HPA pull-down protein levels with invasion potential. Excel data analysis tool pack’s correlation and regression analyses with ANOVA were used to get the Pearson R and significance values. The stars (*) denote the statistical significance of p < 0.01** and p < 0.05*, respectively.
The list of invasion-promoting glycoprotein candidates identified by LS-MS/MS from HPA pull-down samples
| Gene | Glycans | ID (Uniprot) | Protein name | Function (based on Uniprot ID) | Pearson R |
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| N+O | Q12797 | Aspartyl/asparaginyl beta-hydroxylase | Hydroxylation of Asp or Asn (EGF-like domains) | 0,995 |
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| N+O | Q8NBJ4 | Golgi membrane protein 1 | Regulation of lipid/protein metabolism | 0,992 |
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| N+O | P08238 | Heat shock protein HSP 90-beta | Protein folding | 0,989 |
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| N+O | P02786 | Transferrin receptor protein 1 | Iron transport and homeostasis | 0,971 |
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| O | Q9Y5Y6 | Suppressor of tumorigenicity 14 protein | Degradation of the ECM | 0,959 |
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| O | P06576 | ATP synthase subunit beta, mitochondrial | ATP synthesis | 0,957 |
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| N+O | Q9P2B2 | Prostaglandin F2 receptor negative regulator | Regulates Prostaglandin receptor activity | 0,956 |
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| N+O | O43278 | Kunitz-type protease inhibitor 1 | Endopeptidase inhibitor | 0,934 |
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| N+O | P78527 | DNA-dependent protein kinase catalytic subunit | DNA damage sensor | 0,924 |
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| 0,921 |
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| N+O | Q07954 | Pro-low density lipoprotein receptor-related protein 1 | Endocytosis | 0,877 |
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| N+O | Q14435 | Polypeptide N-acetylgalactosaminyltransferase 3 | O-Glycosylation | 0,870 |
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| 0,847 |
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| 0,774 |
The proteins were classified first by their abundance and then, by their correlation (Pearson R) with cancer cell invasive potential. Bold text refers to proteins which have a known role in cell migration, adhesion, and metastasis according to the Uniprot database.